Literature DB >> 6106237

Perceptions as hypotheses.

R L Gregory.   

Abstract

Perceptions may be compared with hypotheses in science. The methods of acquiring scientific knowledge provide a working paradigm for investigating processes of perception. Much as the information channels of instruments, such as radio telescopes, transmit signals which are processed according to various assumptions to give useful data, so neural signals are processed to give data for perception. To understand perception, the signal codes and the stored knowledge or assumptions used for deriving perceptual hypotheses must be discovered. Systematic perceptual errors are important clues for appreciating signal channel limitations, and for discovering hypothesis-generating procedures. Although this distinction between 'physiological' and 'cognitive' aspects of perception may be logically clear, it is in practice surprisingly difficult to establish which are responsible even for clearly established phenomena such as the classical distortion illusions. Experimental results are presented, aimed at distinguishing between and disconvering what happens when there is mismatch with the neural signal channel, and when neural signals are processed inappropriately for the current situation. This leads us to make some distinctions between perceptual and scientific hypotheses, which raise in a new form the problem: What are 'objects'?

Mesh:

Year:  1980        PMID: 6106237     DOI: 10.1098/rstb.1980.0090

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci        ISSN: 0962-8436            Impact factor:   6.237


  136 in total

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8.  Analyzing the auditory scene: neurophysiologic evidence of a dissociation between detection of regularity and detection of change.

Authors:  Alessia Pannese; Christoph S Herrmann; Elyse Sussman
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Review 9.  Predictive Processing: A Canonical Cortical Computation.

Authors:  Georg B Keller; Thomas D Mrsic-Flogel
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2018-10-24       Impact factor: 17.173

10.  Embodied inference and spatial cognition.

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